“The
Skid Is Everywhere”, And We Just Received More Confirmation That
The Worst Is Yet To Come
7
June, 2019
All
over America, large portions of our major cities are being
transformed into stomach-churning cesspools of squalor.
Thousands of tens cities are popping up from coast to coast as the
homeless population explodes, even the New York Times admits that we
are facing “the
worst drug crisis in American history”,
there were more
than 28,000 official complaints about
human feces in the streets of San Francisco last year alone,
and millions
of rats are
currently overrunning the city of Los Angeles. And yet the
authorities continue to insist that the economy is in good shape and
that everything is going to be just fine.
Perhaps
everything may seem “just fine” if you live in a heavily
sanitized wealthy suburban neighborhood and you only get your news
from heavily sanitized corporate media sources, but in the real world
things are getting really bad.
The
other day, LZ Granderson authored
an editorial in
which he described what life is like in Los Angeles right at this
moment…
LA spent nearly $620 million in tax dollars last year to address the issue, and yet the number of homeless people increased by 16%, reaching nearly 60,000 people.
As a Los Angeles resident, I am among those who wonder what the mayor’s office is doing. When I lived downtown it was virtually impossible to walk a full block in any direction without seeing a homeless person. In Silver Lake where I live now, there are tent cities. On my drive to work I see people living underneath the highway overpasses. It’s no longer Skid Row here. The skid is everywhere.
Of
course that phrase, “the skid is everywhere”, could also apply to
San Francisco, Portland, Seattle, Denver, Minneapolis, Chicago,
Detroit, St. Louis, Memphis, Cleveland, Baltimore, Philadelphia and
countless other U.S. cities.
But
without a doubt, L.A. is particularly disgusting at this point.
In fact, last weekend a columnist for the Los Angeles Times admitted
that “Los
Angeles has become a giant trash receptacle”…
A swath of Los Angeles has devolved into a wasteland with rats scurrying among piles of decaying garbage and squalid tent cities, according to a series of stomach-churning photos that the Los Angeles Times says depict the “collapse of a city that’s lost control.”
“The city of Los Angeles has become a giant trash receptacle,” columnist Steve Lopez complained on Sunday.
We
are seeing this happen at a time when we are being told that the U.S.
economy is still relatively stable.
And
I will concede that point. Right now, the U.S. economy is a
whole lot more stable than it will be in the months ahead.
So
if things are this bad already in our major cities, what are those
cities going to look like once we get deep into the next economic
downturn?
On
Friday, the Labor Department reported that 75,000 jobs were added to
the U.S. economy in May. That number is consistent with the
extremely disappointing figure that ADP reported a
few days earlier,
and it is well below the number of jobs that we need just to keep up
with population growth each month.
Prior
to this latest report, there were already more working age Americans
without a job than
at any point during the last recession,
and now things just got even worse.
But
the government conveniently categorizes the vast majority of working
age Americans without a job as “not in the labor force”, and so
officially the unemployment rate is “very low” right now.
What
a joke.
The
truth is that the middle class has been steadily
shrinking for an extended period of time,
and all of the numbers that have been rolling in seem to indicate
that an economic slowdown has begun.
For
instance, when economic activity is expanding demand for key
industrial resources such as copper, zinc and lumber increases and
prices tend to go up.
But
when economic activity is contracting, demand for those key
industrial resources diminishes and prices tend to go down.
Copper prices have fallen 6% in just the past month while zinc is down 8.5%. Copper and zinc are big components for many industrial and technology companies. People pay so much attention to copper as a barometer that traders jokingly call it Dr. Copper, as if it has a PhD in economics.
Lumber prices are falling as well, plunging about 10% in the past month. That could be viewed as a sign that the housing market — particularly new home construction — is weakening.
If
you were looking for some exceedingly clear indications of where the
U.S. economy is heading in the near future, you just got them.
But
most Americans will continue to live in denial until the very end.
And even though 59
percent of
the population is living paycheck to paycheck, people continue to
rack up debt as if there was no tomorrow.
In
fact, we just learned that the average size of a new vehicle loan in
the U.S. just
hit a brand new record high…
People buying a new vehicle are borrowing more and paying more each month for their auto loan.
Experian, which tracks millions of auto loans each month, said the average amount borrowed to buy a new vehicle hit a record $32,187 in the first quarter. The average used-vehicle loan also hit a record, $20,137.
People
ask me all the time about how they can prepare for the next economic
downturn, and one of the key pieces of advice that
I always give is
to not take on more debt.
Right
now everyone should be building up their financial cushions, because
what is coming is not a joke.
Unfortunately,
most Americans are still completely in denial about what is
happening, and they will find themselves ill-prepared to handle the
very harsh economic environment that is ahead.
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